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The USA has formally submitted its bid to the UNESCO committee responsible for determining World Heritage Site status. That vote and announcement is expected in July of 2023.
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There is no way to measure the amount of knowledge and understanding Westmoreland had of the story of African Americans in this region and nationally.
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Though they’re about 5,000 miles apart, Appalachia has a lot in common with Ukraine, especially the rugged Carpathian Mountains in the western side of the country. A group of scholars has been exploring the parallels between the two regions for years.
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The COVID pandemic is just over two years old now, and has drawn a lot of comparisons to a disease that swept the world early in the 20th century. Cincinnati was not spared then either. WVXU's Bill Rinehart continues a look at comparisons between COVID and the 1918 influenza pandemic.
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How pharmacists can deliver more equitable care to their patients
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COVID-19 first entered the public consciousness about two years ago. It drew a lot of comparisons to another pandemic just over a hundred years earlier. WVXU's Bill Rinehart looks at the influenza wave that surfaced in 1918 and what lessons it has for us today.
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In 1897, Woodson enrolled in Berea College in Kentucky, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in literature. Yet, he spent much of that time outside Kentucky. Jessica Klanderud, director of the Carter G. Woodson Center for Interracial Education at Berea College, shares why.
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A new documentary produced by Dayton PBS station Think TV and Cincinnati PBS station CET delves deep into the history and impact of decisions made in the 1930s that set patterns of racial segregationmany American communities still struggle with today.
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City engineers have looked at what it would take to renovate the tunnel or fill it in.
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The state fossil of Ohio is the trilobite. Kentucky's is the brachiopod. Indiana is one of a handful of states without an official state fossil but that could change if State Rep. Randy Frye of Greensburg has his way.